
2 minute read
OBITUARItrS
llAYlD ll. zuiltTAtT tEO R. STADETIIAII
David M. Zumwalt, personnel manager of Lorenz Lumber Co., dieil of a heart attack on Jnne 10. He was 62.
Ele was a transport pilot for the Navy during World War II, and also was a member of the Presbyterian Church df Burney, Calif., the Shasta County Sherifr's Flying Posse and Shasta-Cascade Hoo-Hoo Club 133.
He is survived by his widow, Madeline; son, David, from Redding; daughter, Sandra Lee McCaffrey of Camp Pendleton; and three sisters.
Leo R. Stadelman, a forester for J. H. Baxter and Co., died June 9, when his pickup truck collided with a large transport trailer near Hayfork, Calif. He was 39.
Mr. Stadelman was a member of ShastaCascade Hoo-Hoo Club 133. Living in An- derson, Calif., he was buried at Corvallis, Ore.
He leaves his widow, Doris; sons, Dale and Larry; and daughter, Nancy, all of Anderson. His father, mother and sister reside in Portland. Ore.
I(IRREST G()RD(IN FAUTI(
Forrest Gordon Faulk, insurance broker with Bayly, Martin and Fay, Inc., Los Angeles, died in an auto-truck eollision on his way home from Palm Springs June 12. He was 50.
His firm is the insurance carzier for the Lumber Association of Southelu- Calif.
Born in Chadron, Neb., December 6, 1919, Mr. Faulk went to high school at Gordon and attended Chadron State College; the University of Nebraska and the Military Academy at West Point. He was active in the U.S. Navy from October 1931 to October 1945. At the time of his death he held the rank of Captain in the Naval Reserve. He also was assistant chief of staff with the Naval Air reserve staff at Los Alamitos Air Station.
In 1965 the Faulk family moved to So. Calif. On October 10, !942 he married Pearl
Wectem Lumbcr & Eulldlng lhoseriole ,$ERCHANT
Jeannette Swanson who survives him, along with their chiklren: Donna Jeannette Garlinghouse, Eugene, Ore.; John Forest Ronald Edward, James Allen and Richard Lee Faulk of Cypress.
Mr. Faulk is also survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John P. Faulk of Chadron.
OTIVER D. RUSE
Oliver D. Ruse, operator of a lumber company in Stockton, Calif., for 40 years, died recently. He was 87.
Mr. Ruse, a native of Kansas, started a lumber business in Stockton in 1928 with Don Blair as his partner, the Ruse-Blair Lumber Co. In 1946 Mr. Ruse bought out Blair and Mr. Ruqg's son, Dale, entered the business.
He was a member of Hoo-Hoo Interaational: the Central United Methodist Church; and the downtown Kiwanis Club, with which he had a 29 year perfect attendance record. He was also a charter member of the Stockton Executive Club and the Commonwealth CIub of San Francisco. Ee lived in Stockton 47 years.
Survivors include his widow, Etha; son and a grandson, all of Stockton.
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